New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 19, 1926, Page 15

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NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 19, 1926. TON JONES LEADS IN PRO. GOLF NEET Tops Field With 71 for 18 Holes at New Haven New Havep, July 1% U?).—Tom Jones, pro at the West Barrington ( R. L) club, led the field with a 71 for 18 holes in the morning round of the, New England Profes ional Golf association anunual tournament or ' championship honors today. The play was over the New Haven Country club course and conditions cere fast, although the first”players out found the turf wet, which checked the roll of the ball to some tent. Jones went out with a 34, which | cas the best for the nine holes, and ame home in 37, which was a fig- re made by several. H. C. Lage blad of Bristol, Conn. unattached s second for the morning with 72, ‘hile Willie Ogg of Worcester and D. D. Hackney of Merrimack Val- ey club, Methuen, Mass., were tied or next place with 74's. The tournament will be 72 ho he second 36 to be played tomo ow. Donald Vinson, Plymouth (Mass.) . C.: Out 35, in 41—76. James Andrew, New Haven C. C.: put 35, in 42—77. George McLeod, Mass.) C. C.: Out 37, in R. D. Sanford, Litchfield C. but 41, in 46—87. Robert Andrew, New Haven C. C. but 35, in 39—17. Jim Hendry, Manchester( N. H.) . C.: Out 87, in 28—75 ‘rank A. Gilman, Augusta Out 47, in 41—T8. Sutherland, Fall River . Out 40, in 37—17. Dawson, Bristol: Out 47, in Belmont 40—T78. C.: (Me.) 4—T79. George Sparling, Brooklawn C. C.; 39, in 36—75. Ilie Ogg,“Worcester C. in 36—74. . Bernard Thomson, New Hav Yale): Out 41, in 44— Jim Dowd, Watch Hiil ut 40, in 46— Jack Gray, but 38, in 40— William Kerigan, Pine onn.: Out 34, in 41—7 H. C. Lagerblad, Bristol: ut § Out 8 n (R. 1): Wollaston (Mass.)? Orchard, Qut Tom Jones, West Barrington, R. Out '34, in 37—71. John Strait, Hartford John Cowan, Watertown( Mass.) pakiey . C.: Out 39, in 42—81. Alex Fllis, Beverly, Mass.: Out 39, 45—84. D. D. Hackney ferrtmack Valley Bert Nichols, prings, Out 36 Out 40, in Metheun Out 36, in 38— Belmont (Mas: in 30—75. 14 George Aulbach, Aglington, Mass.: | ut 36, in 39— James Bracken, New Haven, and arry Fifis. Vesper Country cluk bwell, Mass., did not turn in cards hird Avenue “L” Buys Westchester Railway White Plains, N. Y., July 19 (M— he stock, franchise and equipment the Westehester Street Railway mpany, a subsidiary of the New ork, New Haven and Hartford hilroad, was purchased today by bpresentatives of the Third Avenue " line of New York for $70,000, ho outhid the New Haven by $1,- 0. The company serves the cent: gion of Westchester county. al he proposed elaborate 088 coun Netv Haven. he New Haven company .bought e street car company a number of ars ago for nearly s million dol- system of rs, but it went into the hands of | receiver over six years ago. New Haven, July 19 (P—Edward | Buckland, vice president and pneral counsel of hte New Haven d Hartford railroad compan, is afternoon that there would be p statement at this time as to the ported purchase by the Third Av e railway system of the West- ester Street Railway company e latter property was a subsidiary pliey line of the steam railroad d was in the group once segregat- Spring | (Mass.) | L) | The | rchase is helieved to be a blow to | v busses, contemplated by | said | ed b sold, the and ordered dissolved government which decree some months ago. The dnnual report of the Haven company shows that all the securities of the Westchester com- pany were owned by it. The line is entire separate from the New York, Westchester and Boston Railway company, another subsidiary. Boy at Hospital Not | Afflicted With Tetanus | Announcement was made today at the New Britain General hospital that John Tadawlione, 12 years old, who has been under obscrvation at the hospital for lockjaw will not be affected by the disease. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Tadaw- lione of 280 Washington strect. He was shot in the hand with a blank carctridge on July 4th. When the boy complained of stiffness about the jaw a few days ago Dr. Vincent Mendillo was called and it wasg decided to put the boy under observation to watch for further symptoms of tetanus. He has been |in the hospital since Saturd: HALL-MILLS INQUIRY oo | New Jersey State Police Starts To- | day To Inquire Further Into Re- ported Nety Evidence. Trenton, N. J., July 19 (P—Cap. tain John J. Lamb, commander of headquagters troops of the state {police, left Trenton early today for the scene of the unsolved Hall- Mills murder, to check up on new developments in the crime brought out in the marriage annulment peti- tion filed in chancery court here by |Arthur S, Riehl: Riehl charged that his wife, formerly a parlor-maid in the rectory of the Rey, Dr. Edward {Wheeler Hall at New Brunswick, knows who killed the minister and choir leader, Mrs. nor Mills, on a Somerset county farm. | In addition to Captain Lamh, a |trooper whose identity is being kept |secret has been detailed to conduct a {finish search for clues to the slayer or slayers. Both Captain Lamb and |the trooper are under ord port to no one except Ma {0. Kimber acting superinte {of the state police. “Most of the things brought out in Riehl's petition have been on file at our headquarters for a long time.” | Major Kimberling said. “They are of such a nature that they must be arded as purely circumstantial. We hope for k' in the |case to give us the key to the tion of the crime.” Governor Smith Ends His Mountain Vacation Paul Smith’s, Y., July 19 (P— Covernor Alfred E. Smith concluded his thre nd e | Point some new ‘bre: solu- days in the forenoon ke Champlain He planned to stop en |Lake Placid, and visit Josept umulty, secretary to former Pr dent Wilson, who is spending the summer there and has invited the |governor to call. Continuing Mr. Smith expects to reach Bluff Polnt in time to visit the for Bluff on L at B si- route Plattsburg in the late afternpon. would meet there Davis of the war department who is to review the troops., French Gold Transferred London, July 19 (P— 1 500,000 in gold, transfer: France during the war aga ish advances to France, and tione in Franco-British agreement is now in tk the United tates I"ede bank, Chancellor of the Churchill belieyes. He made tho rtion today in the house of commons in answer to a question. The gold was transfer- from men- th debt 18 Reserve Exchequer id E and the British was never included gold reserve. BIG STOCK DEAL Baltimore. |tions with Dillon, Read {pany of New York for the sale 18,000,000 of first and consolidated six per cent gold bonds of the Se {board Air Line railway company Lave been closed, President §. Da- |vles Warfield of the Secaboard, an- Inounced today. and com- / T/ e 7 i 7~ MIGOSH, MAN, You'D BETTER GET To TH' SEA- SHORE AS FasT AS YA cAN AND CLEAR "e L. THE ABSENT-M By SMALL 7 LA ER MOUNTAINS JEST UP YOUR BRONCHIAL. TuBES// i INDED PHYSICIAN wae New | e e e PERSONALS ton drive is at Bay View, Milford for two weeks, Misses Margaret Madeline Reynolds left for.a week’s stay at Sound View. liney York-St. Louis baseball New York yesterday. game Edward Xiernan street is spending New York. of two Basset weeks Couch his William court is on Catskills, of vacation in Albert Borg of the Connecticu Light and Power Co. sales forc has gone to the shore for weeks, Mrs. Ruth Roberts of street is spending a | Cleveland, Ohio. . John E ie, of 128 returned Mr. and ughter, venue M Ma Tobin Black from anc Pitts; ould Commerce, the Boy scout | Raiph L. of the Chamber secretary of at | Fortland. week camp School Supt d Mrs. Stanley H Hol left today fo! faine where they will spend thei nnual vacation. They expect t stay in that state for a month. Holm th vacation here today | citizens military training camp at| He | Secretary Dwight | Is in United States Bank | inst Brit- | ilts of | red to America during the war, he | with | July 19 (P—Negotia- | “rnment of | Miss Ethelyn | Mildrea Juengst will spend | next two weeks at House, Westerly, It J Brown and th L Buden and returned Misses Helen mina Barbonik have | Scouts’ camp at Portland. Mr. and Mre. Carl Neurath | 'rank and Jac reet and Ray Cook spent the nd at the Lakeside House, Taramuggas. John Lacava, Richard and George McMahon w visitors at Sound View. Reynold week-en Harmon Halleran was a {Sound View last week. harland is Grove visitor a Miss Violet { her vacation a spendin, Beach. | éity Items At 2:25 fire department was called |guish a fire in a wooden shed Crescent avenue oft Roosevelt street London, tions he uly 19 () — Negotia B officials anc | Brigadier General Lin€oln C. An drews, American prohibition en forcement chief, today were brough up in the house of commons nt Morden, conservative. Mr. Morden brought the matte up at the end of the regular que tion perlod but his question ! not, nswered by for Forelgn Affairs Locker-Lamp. son, who contended that he had no received advance notice of the in terrogation. Mr. Morden wanted to | whether any negotiations were [ ing undertaken by the British gov with the United State government with reference to th | importation of liquor into United States. He also wanted know would give an no further search of torial we ports, be J een v tish wa knov understanding treaties involving ships outside of terri ters and British empir conceded without consul. tha th The speaker upfield Under Secre. tary Locker-Lampson’s point tha at present notice of the foreign office . E. CONVENTION ON Three Minute inasmuch m had not as advanc: r . Addresses Palace. Christiun opened in the Crystal Palace today with three-minute addresses by speakers of 30 nationalities, outlin- ing the progress of the movement in their respective countries. The American delegation, strong, iccluded Dr. Daniel A, ing, head of the movement in United States, while Dr. Francis ward Clark of Boston, founder of the society, presided at the initial sesslon. He was presented with an tvory gavel, the gift of Joseph Ward, a prominent Sheftield endeavorer, for use by future international con- ferences. Besides Dr. Clark, three other members of the first Christian In- deavor society, founded at Portland, Oregon, in %881, were on the plat- form. They were Mrs, Clark, Stan- ville Staples, and Miss Kenworthy 700 Pol- the 30 KILLED NEAR BE . Berlin, July 19 (P—Thirty persons are dead andfpight injured in conse- quence of a serics of automobile ac- cidents, bathing fatalities and sui- cides in Berlin and vicinity over the week-end. Eighteen were drowned while seek- ing rellef from the heat wave; 10 took their own lives by gae or shoot- ing. principally, the police say, be- cause of the distressing economic conditions, and two were killed in accidents, Miss Esther Anderson of 85 Sef. and yesterday Frank Schmidt attended the New in in Hungerford the two Harrison | month in Rock | field, Mass., after a week's vacation, spending at Miss | row streets of Chinatown v Pleasant View | horne Wolter- | from Camp Sprague, the New Britain Girl o'clock this afternoon the to extin- ABOUT ANDREWS Questions Arise in Common: About Negotiations by Under Sccretary the | to f1o whether the forcign secretary | tation with the hpuse of commons. | the questions need not be answered ached the Features Opening Exercises At The Crystal London, July 19 (A—The World's Endeavor convention was e ;‘P ET"NH PARTY, Wall Street Briefs i been reduced 25 cents a ton in the Chicago district, current quotations Fal‘mel‘ Killm and Seven Young ranging from $14.50 to $15 a ton. a Men Are Tnvolved weaker tone in other grades of iron Keokuk, - Towa, July 19 (P—A and steel scrap reported. death believed to have been the re-|easy for some time to come, the in- sult of a farmer’s interference with|flow of funds to Wall street from in- “petting parties” in parked automo-|terior banka combined with an ah- biles along a highway near here was|sence of any large inci in bor- given official scrutiny today. The|rowings of stock brokers is consid- farmer, Samuel Hurd, 46, was killed |ered rasponsible for prevailing mod- and seven young men, all sons of |er prominent families, were questioned. The seven said that a shotgun| carried by the farmer had been dis- charged in a scuffle over its poss sion while they were investigating a story that one of their number, ac-|ceding w companied by a girl, had been ac- costed by the farmer on Saturd Retail sales of the Gardner Motor night., Hurd w said to have de-|Co., Inc.,, for e half year manded money of the couple on pain [more than doube the of turning them over to the authori- [last yvea While official figures of ties. {earnings are not yet available, net |profits are estima in excess o common stock. The opinlon is said to prevail in banking circles that money ra will continue to he comparatively t Crude the week ended July 17 increased 500 barrels, averaging 614,000 rels daily compared with the K. t pre- were i | |cents a share on - GHRISTIAN BURIAL Willys Overland Co., reports net |profit of $7.423,588 for the first half |ot 1926 arter depreciation, interest, ljustments and At ederal taxes equal $18.125,700 to $2.68 a share on 2, ires of stock. dividends on pre- red stock, - sk common Unusual Sight Takes Place in|° Chinatown Today 5 - | tnessed T Ty ey unusual sight today of a Chinese Mrs, to a Christian bu A a reverent procession 200 of his countrymen. Sing, On Leong gunman who was electrocuted last Thursday for the murder of another Chinese in a tong mbraced the Catholic | faith a few moments before being ! 1ed to the death chamber, and so to- | day the body was carried in a coffin the Catholic church of the T'rans- ration at Mott 1 st But Wing’s countrymen stiil | honored him, despite his conversion | to a foreign faith, and his proc | was one of theilongest in China- {ber of the town's history. | The funer |afternoon at chapel Rev, will conduct Burial will Pairview of ‘ | New York, July 19 (P—The nar- It int | Anna Nelson Nelson, 34 years old, the state sanitar fter an i Mrs, died of three of Philip Nelson, in ad of of ¥e | some 1 on ness Sam former football baseball player who was killed i accident vear Survivir e a brother, John Adolphson H ford, her veral Sweden S ern New Britain eral some time prior to war, out a ago. W mother and ployed at hospi fline ated with the Iso a mem- n churcl 1d ivard rnally sl Vega societ = ssion d vill be rwin Ahlquist, 1 services. plot in DEBT IS TAKEN UP | House of Commons Starts Delibera- | Dr. the be in emetery. Abel the V" t George Neumann George, two-vear-old and Mrs. Fred Neumann of (ing died at the home of his par- ents Saturday e were held at the son of Mr. w- tions on Financial Settlement | | With French Govt. London, July 19 (P | British accord wa noon at 3 o'clock A. C Theo- der consideration in the hvs thasgn. haitoh ot MEeors commons today. German Lutheran church, officiated. | The debate was invited by Captain | tptarment was in Falrview cemetery William Wedgwood Benn, who com- plained that the government i.nll |{aken no steps to put pressure on | I'ray or Italy for the dowr their foreign luction of He asked if the French ment was really a final one—would [ #¢ give stability to France, and might |not the German default clause | possibly ultimately vitiate the whole agreement {morrow morning at IZdward Hilton Young, supporting | peter's church. Interment e settlement, held that, while Him St. Mary's cemetery, not be brilliant, it was at| prudent. { service this after- The Franco- un- o re home ken house re Adelbert Asal is hon rt illn wife Asal ye old, died 10 Yale s He s surviv- Emma; two Bert and Iph Asa two dau - ters, Mrs. John Claney and Miss | Be Asal, and a sister, Mrs. Mary ‘\\'rvlfr'r of Waterbury. Funeral services will | either reet tari g s or e after a sb armaments. log by his settle- sons, 5 be Teld to 9 o'clock at § will be Raymond Charles Seanion Raymond Charles Seamon, {son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. 10n of 111 Rhodes street, died yes- erday afternoon. The funeral was held this afternoon. Rev. A | 2 Theodore Steege, pastor of St. Mat- thew's German Lutheran church, of- ficiated. Burfal was in Fairview metery. 1] . SIXTY UNIONISTS ARE | ON TRIAL FOR LIVES Government Begins Sece i 5 " {Turkish s Miecczkowski 51 died ast evening two months. Act of Prosceution of John Mieczkowski, Troad street, sanitarium illness of surviving relatives brother and sister in Europe. funeral will be at Sacred church tomorrow morning o'clock. Tnterment will be in Sac Heart cemeter { Plotters vears old, in New- aft. His a 19 () dy to he Turkish raise the second act of fits political opponents, | hanged in the st for al- Kill the attempt d | the Kemalist | July is Angora | government V1 cur on the | prosecution of | whom S streets of Smyrna € legedly having plotted ident, but only profit by his overthrow on re: o1 are of we H week at to with an assassination of 7:30 jpre {by the eaee e| The atmosphere of mystery whispered conversation recalls the days of th e sultans., All those u der arrest are unionists—members of the commiftee of union and pro- gress—feared for their political sa- gacity and influence abroad. IS FINED AND JAILED | Bogus Count Suffers Heavy Penalty and | Funerals e Helen Kozlowski Funeral services for Helen lowski, infant daughter of Mr. Mrs. Boleslaw Kozlowski of 59 |Silver street, were held ing. Burial was in Sacred Heart cemetery, © : Koz- and o peculators Blamed for Part of Franc’s Decline Paris, July 19 (A —Endeavors o speculators to profit from the p ent unsettled political situation the tendency of the French to get rid of paper money as it comes into their possession are believed by financial experts to be the two big reasons for the contin- u downward slide of the franc. At Hands of Judge In Boston Court Today. and Boston, July 19 (A—"Count Paul Monte,” otherwise Nicholas Weis- man, was sentenced by Judge Ios- dick in superior criminal court to- | day to six months in the house of | . | correction and a fine of $100 for non-support of his wife, Estelle and his daughter, Miriam, and to| six months and a $100 fine de- | rtion of his family. | Hong Kong, July 19 (A—Low ly Monte, who last week led a Boston |ing thoroughfares of this city 1 police inspector on a wild goose |island and of Kowloon on the main- chase to New York, where he said |land were flooded early today as a he had $8,000 in securities in H‘\‘AAHH of one of the most terrific deposit vault, made a long|Tain and thunder storms that ever statement in court, in which he in-|Visited this vicinity. Numerous Chi- sisted that he was a count, and said he was born in Paris, Monte had been plgeed on probs tion by Judge Fosdick on the non- | support and desertion charges on his statement that he had $8,000 | which he would deposit as a guaran- tee with the court. An officer ac- companied him to New York, but the | people s soon FLOODS IN CHINA also for safe was done by nd landslides in some for a and sections time. damage service spended was brought back. o UNDERT. Phone 1 Opposite St. CHINESE DESERTING Peking, July 19 (A—Two hrigades of troops of the allied armics of Marshals Chang Tso-Lin and Wu Pei-Iu, now termed mutineers in Chinese reports seem to be causing a diversion of the Nankow front. In- stead of escaping to the enemy :and joining the nationalist army as was first believed to be their intentione. it is reported the deserters, thought to number from 6,000 to 10,000, are making a stand in the hills agains their erstwhile companions in arms BOLLERER’S POSY SHOP TO FRIENDS WHO SAIL YOU CAN SAY “BON VOYAGE" WITH FLOWERS BY WIRE AY W. MAIN ST, PROF. BLDG. TEL. 885 “The Telegraph Florist of New Britain.’ same period | months. She was the widow | " Tuesday | infant | art | this morm- | \ nese are dead, considerable property | GENERAL MOTORS | HITS T0P FIGURE (Establishes New High Record | for All Time | By ted Prees. July 19—Establ jof a high record for a by General Motors ¢ on large volume resumption of movement in to- ar traders, new crossed trading, the on a tured t} ward in me profit- taking in rece stub- bornly spots, conteste in sions in The “rench advance about | succeeded bringing ral specia rens i fr collapse ne urgent governmen apparently was without effeet on of which stocks, buyi nced by a lowe > call money vorable we was i r- i of tk and gen- de el shares softening of | some dlstricts reports of an unusually small seasonal decrease in production and ming business. Strong pools were at work in the motor feved to t built up price-cutting up falling off in car sales, to date led to materi In the oil group, Simms petro- 1 sank new low for the | r and the others were in supply | ports of another new field ba carnings reports relatively steady, s . 1 held ap steel in “ing counteracted by which is h hort int pectation of severe { harbor a lin ex land a whick [aliz {leum Iye has to a h is reported ually good earning Marine pre- {tions far fleet. | Am Am Si . | Am Tel & Tel | Am Tobh [ Ana Cop Atchison Bald Loco Balt & | Reth Steel ‘(‘Hhv Pet Can Pac Cer De Ches & CMa&sSP C R 1 & Pac Chrysler Corp Coco Cola Colo Fuel Consol Gas |Corn Prod Cru Stee { Do Bros {Du Pont De Nem Erie RR Erie 1st Fam Play isk Rubber | Genl Asphalt Genl Elec . !Gen1 Motors Gt North Tron Ore Ctfs |Gt North pfd | Hudson Motors Int Nickel Ken Cop Lehigh Val |Louis & Nash | Mack Truck | Marlana ol lo Kan & Tex | Mo Pac prd | Mont Wa |National Lead N Y Central NYNHG&H Nor & West North Amer .. North Pacific Pack Mot C |Pan Am Pet B Pennsylvania | Plerce Arrow Radio Corp | Reading Sears Roel lair Oil Southern Pac Ry Stewart Warner 7 Ohio Pasco Ohio 131% 1431 17 A 4 rs 543 30 447 Sir Southern IN B | Southern Studebaker Texas Co |Texas & Pac | Union Pac United Fruit lusctirP . T8 Ind Al | U 8 Rubber [U s steel | Wabash Ry | Ward Bak | West Elec | White Motor Wilys Over | Woolworth 6014 1443 46 B 6112 LOCAL by STOCKS (Furnished Putnam Insurance Stocks Bid 40 680 Aetna Casualty Actna Life Ins Co Aetna Part Paid Actna Full Paid Aetna Fire Automobil Hartford Fire National Fire Phoenix Firc Travelers Ins Co | Conn General Manufacturing Stocks {Am Hard $3 | Am Hosiery . 28 [ Beaton & Cadwell | Bige-Hfd Cpt Co com | Billings & Spencer com | Billings & Spencer pfd | Bristol Brass | Colt's Arms Fagle Lock Fafnir Bearing Hart & Cooley | Landers, ¥ [N B Machine N B Machine pfd | Niles-Be-Pond com | North & Judd | Peck, Stowe Russell Mfg Co | Seovill Mfg Co |standard Screw Stanley Works Stanley Works pfd Co PUTNAM & CO MEMBERS NEW YORK & WARITTORD STOGR EXCHANGES *IWEST MAIN ST NEW BRITAIN- Tel. 2040 FARTIORD OFFICL 6 CENTRAL ROW T2u)8-mgd We Offer: 100 American Hardware 100 Stanley Works Thomson, Temn & e Burritt Hotel Bldg.. New Britain Telephone 2580 MEMB! SW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCK EXCHANGES Donald R. Hart, Mgr. . WE HOFFICR AMERICAN HARDWARE Price on application WE DO NOT ACCEPT MAR! ACCOUNTS HARTFORD Hartford Conn. Trust Bldg. Tel.2-7186 NEW,BRITAIN Burritt Hote!"ldg. Tel. 3420 WE OFFER 50 shares Stanley Works 100 shares American Hardware 11 Wall Street, New Ya Stock Exchange k City New York New York New York Produce New York Coffec & Chicago Board of Trade Cotton Exchange Chicago Stock Market Exch Indianapolis Stock Exchange Suga Winnipeg Grain Exchange r Exchange Announce the opening on Monday, July 19, 1926, of a branch in the Burritt Hotel building, New Britain, Conn,, the offices formerly occupied by Judd & Co., to conduct a securities and commodi- ties brokerage business. This office will be under the management of T. Frank Lee. Union Mfg Co .. 4 27 {0y wle a 1 Public Utilities Stocks |C ““"\!:} S Bdlll\'ll‘l}llg‘ Togay Stronger Than Ever Tuly 19 (A —Capital and total resou s of state United States n Conn Elec Conn It Gas Southern N I Tel 1 N E Tel R Serviee ... 66 i Pow pfd . 4 gEt 45 29 New Orle nental t reflect today before healthy banking institutions, it made ever TREASURY STATEMENT hole the ion revealed ina today ry-treast o statement by R. Sims. er of the Nationa! Supervisors of State Association of SIXTY DIE IN FLOODS July 19 (&) Jugoslavia, s have wit ement embodied a report Sims to the an- convention of the association us, Ohio, and included to nsaction of both state and na yanks April 12. Vienna, Austria by M ports from Cettinje the floods in that r 1 stroyed villages loss of 60 lives several h i Her P{cture Is Worth Money Hollywood city fads, has a new one—the photo-check. Gladys McConnell had her bank make special checks for her with And now her photo is worth money. her plcture on them. Torrington Co com

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